R-factors: Difference between revisions

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Another paper which investigates the properties of R-values in the presence of twinning is [http://journals.iucr.org/d/issues/2013/07/00/ba5190/index.html P. R. Evans and G. N. Murshudov (2013) "How good are my data and what is the resolution?" Acta Cryst. (2013). D69, 1204-1214]. As the title indicates, this paper discusses at what resolution the data should be cut. One important finding is that a perfect model gives an R value of 42.0% (for a perfect twin, 29.1%) against pure noise. This suggests that a model that gives significantly lower R-values in the highest resolution shell may be improved by including higher resolution data.
Another paper which investigates the properties of R-values in the presence of twinning is [http://journals.iucr.org/d/issues/2013/07/00/ba5190/index.html P. R. Evans and G. N. Murshudov (2013) "How good are my data and what is the resolution?" Acta Cryst. (2013). D69, 1204-1214]. As the title indicates, this paper discusses at what resolution the data should be cut. One important finding is that a perfect model gives an R value of 42.0% (for a perfect twin, 29.1%) against pure noise. This tells us that a model that gives significantly lower R<sub>free</sub> in the (current) high resolution shell may benefit from including higher resolution data.
   
   
* R-values and [[pseudo-translation]]: if you have pseudotranslation you should be aware that if you solve the structure by molecular replacement, starting R factors could be 70-80%.
* R-values and [[pseudo-translation]]: if you have pseudotranslation you should be aware that if you solve the structure by molecular replacement, starting R factors could be 70-80%.
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